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David Frost Dead at Age 74

F

FredLeonard

Guest
David Frost has died of heart attack while onboard the cruise ship QE2 in the Mediterranean. Frost was the creator and star of "That Was The Week That Was" in both its original British and American version. TW3 was a predecessor of Laugh-In and Saturday Night Live. Frost hosted a syndicated late night talk show for Westinghouse Broadcasting. He is perhaps best remembered for his series of interviews with leading figures, including most notably former president Richard Nixon.

http://www.latimes.com/news/la-me-david-frost-dies-at-74-20130901,0,5517575.story
 
He currently had a one-hour news talk show on Al Jazeera English. Before I heard about his passing, I noticed Al Jazeera America runs his show late night on Saturdays.

I certainly wouldn't want to suffer a heart attack on a cruise ship. I'm sure the QE2 has decent doctors aboard but does it have a fully stocked emergency room? Unless the attack was so severe that he couldn't be saved, even if he were in a modern hospital.
 
Sorry to hear this. He was always one of my favorites. I'm surprised he was only 74. I remember him first on the American version of "That Was the Week that Was," on NBC 1963-64, and from his excellent daily show syndicated by Westinghouse in the late 1960s. "TWTWTW" (American version) has disappeared and isn't available on video, and I would love to see it again. Perhaps NBC erased the videotapes. They were know for doing things like that.

R.I.P Sir David!
 
Per http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Frost , Frost received his OBE in 1970 and his knighthood in 1993.

I probably first heard of him when The David Frost Show aired on the Westinghouse stations, including KYW, starting in 1969, the year I turned 8. I was in 10th grade when he interviewed Nixon but hardly looked at those interviews (and I didn't see, rent, or buy Frost/Nixon).

Yes, RIP Sir David.

ixnay
 
Frost and Dick Cavett were my two favorite talk-show hosts when
I was a teenager in the early '70s; there actually seemed to be
real conversation on those shows, and both hosts were extremely
intelligent (although I think most past guests would say that Merv
was the best listener; Cavett once said that he never really
listened to his guests since he was usually concerned about breaking
for a commercial at the right time). Of the five major talk-show hosts
of the early '70s (Frost, Cavett, Carson, Griffin, and Douglas), only Cavett
is left, and talk shows are the poorer for it (if I had it to do over again and
had the charisma to be a television personality, I'd like to use the theory of
"what goes around, comes around" and put on a talk show like the ones of
the pre-Donahue era--which too many hosts have carried 'way beyond what
I think Phil intended).

Re the Nixon interviews: IIRC, Frost never did get Nixon to admit he'd
done anything wrong in his handling of Watergate.

There are two "TW3" incidents that come to mind: the British version,
on the weekend of JFK's assassination, scrapped its planned program and
put together what may have been the most appropriate tribute to him aired
anywhere in the world that weekend. Second, "TW3" had scored well in the
ratings in a Friday-night slot on NBC in the winter of 1964; in the fall, NBC moved
it to Tuesdays (when Frost took over from Elliot Reid as host of the American version)
against "Peyton Place" and "Petticoat Junction." Because "TW3" had been savaging
Barry Goldwater, he bought the Tuesday 9:30 (ET) slot on NBC every week but two
between September and the election on November 3, 1964. By then, viewers had
committed to one of the competing shows. On November 10, "TW3" opened with a
line, something like, "The regularly scheduled political program will not be seen tonight,"
but it was too late, and "TW3" was not renewed for the 1965-66 season.

Frost had an illustrious career on both sides of the big pond. I, too, say R.I.P. Sir David.
 
He currently had a one-hour news talk show on Al Jazeera English. Before I heard about his passing, I noticed Al Jazeera America runs his show late night on Saturdays.

That was his second series for Al Jazeera, The Frost Interviews, which was in its second season. Prior to that, he hosted Frost Over the World for the network for 6 years.
 
He currently had a one-hour news talk show on Al Jazeera English. Before I heard about his passing, I noticed Al Jazeera America runs his show late night on Saturdays.

I certainly wouldn't want to suffer a heart attack on a cruise ship. I'm sure the QE2 has decent doctors aboard but does it have a fully stocked emergency room? Unless the attack was so severe that he couldn't be saved, even if he were in a modern hospital.

I was also surprised at David Frost's relatively young age. Sad that he died so young(ish). That means he was only 26 when TW3 was on the air in 1965, and only 38 when he did the Nixon interviews in 1977. No wonder the older, more experienced, and manipulative Nixon was able to steamroll over Frost for much of their time together. If you haven't seen it, watch Nixon/Frost...great film, directed by Ron Howard. Frost was played by Michael Sheen, who seems to have become the default, when we need somebody to play a famous middle-aged Englishman. Sheen has played former PM Tony Blair about 5 times now.
 
My late Mom became a big David Frost fan in 1964, when the U.S. version of "That Was The Week That Was" premiered on NBC.

She then watched all his various shows and specials until she passed away.

You may not know was that Frost briefly was the original host and interviewer on "Inside Edition" when it premiered in January of 1989. But within weeks, he left the show, reportedly because he clashed with the producers, who wanted the show to be "more tabloidy" like "A Current Affair" and "Hard Copy", while Frost wanted "Inside" to be more "respectable".

One of the true giants of television on both sides of the Atlantic.
 
I saw a color videotape of this in the television version of "The Beatles Anthology", but I had always assumed it was from an Ed Sullivan show, perhaps the 1968/69 Fall season premiere.

Thanks for clearing this up.
 
I saw a color videotape of this in the television version of "The Beatles Anthology", but I had always assumed it was from an Ed Sullivan show, perhaps the 1968/69 Fall season premiere.

Thanks for clearing this up.
 
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